Most Things Haven't Worked Out

Most Things Haven't Worked Out is an album by the American musician Junior Kimbrough, released in 1997. It was his third album for Fat Possum Records and the last before his 1998 death.

Production
All of the album's songs were written by Kimbrough, who generally did not cover the material of other musicians. He elected to keep his mistakes and missed notes on the tracks. Three of the tracks were recorded at his Mississippi juke joint. John Hermann helped produce a few of the songs. Kenny Brown served as the second guitarist. The title track is an instrumental.

Critical reception
The Village Voice wrote: "Lurking beneath an ostensibly primitive surface are suggestions of jazz-inflected bluesmen like Robert Jr. Lockwood." Guitar Player determined that "there's a deeply hypnotic quality to Junior Kimbrough's old-as-all-of-time slow blues, perfected over a lifetime of playing jukes around Holly Springs, Mississippi." The St. Louis Post-Dispatch said that "Kimbrough plays the blues to mesmerize, with elements that give trance, ambient/techno and dub its entrainment and rock and roll its visceral claw and kick."

The Washington Post noted that "Kimbrough has a soft spot for love songs and slowly grinding dance grooves." The Boston Herald concluded that "what sounds primitive at first gains unexpected power through repetition and deceptively sophisticated shifts of texture, tone and rhythm." Robert Christgau praised "Lonesome Road".

The Penguin Guide to Blues Recordings considered Most Things Haven't Worked Out to be Kimbrough's best album.